This factsheet provides an analysis of week 51 (November 2–14, 2022) of the U.S. Census Bureau Household Pulse Survey measuring the social and economic impact of COVID-19 on households. It shows:

Black, non-Hispanic women and Latinas were more likely than white, non-Hispanic men to:

  • Have lost employment income.
  • Not have enough food to eat.
  • Not be able to afford enough food for their children to eat if they themselves were also experiencing food insufficiency.
  • Be behind on their rent and mortgage payments.
  • Be stressed about price increases.

Disabled Black, non-Hispanic women and disabled Latinas were more likely than nondisabled white, non-Hispanic men to:

  • Have lost employment income.
  • Not have enough food to eat.
  • Be behind on their rent payments.
  • Be stressed about price increases.

LGBT adults of color were more likely than non-LGBT white, non-Hispanic adults to:

  • Have lost employment income.
  • Not have enough food to eat.
  • Be behind on their rent payments.
  • Be stressed about price increases.